Hindu Wedding Traditions India

India Hindu Wedding and Marriage Traditions

If you or your fiance are from India, your Colorado wedding may well be much more elaborate and beautiful than the typical American wedding! You’ll want an Indian Wedding Planner who understands Hindu wedding customs and traditions, and can work with you to adapt these rich customs to America. For example, if you invite Lord Ganesh to your wedding in the form of an elephant, it can cost $40,000 to transport one from Hollywood to Denver and back (there are no local elephant rental services here)! We can help make that happen, but a lavishly decorated white horse for the groom is much more practical in Colorado.

Chris Mohr

Rev. Chris Mohr is happy to perform a simpler, romantic, American-style ceremony which weaves in quotes from both Christian and Hindu sources such as the words of Sri Ramana Maharshi or Sri H.W.L. Poonjaji. Rev. Mohr also has extensive experience being part of a larger, more traditional Hindu wedding, where he offers the more simple ceremony and the Hindu priest offers the more elaborate rituals.

Unlike typical American weddings, Indian couples and both families are often deeply involved in collaborating and planning the traditional wedding of their dreams. Hospitality is often extremely important, and every guest is made to feel like royalty! Jewelry is exquisite. Some of the world’s finest cloths are often imported from India. American weddings usually consist of a wedding and a reception. Indian wedding traditions include at least four events, 7 meals, and three dresses for the bride: prayers days before for new beginnings, wisdom.

Ladies’ Mehndi: to beautify the bride Sangeet: music, rehearsal dinner, greet with sweets, dances, little gifts, garba dance with sticks Seherabandi: groom welcomed into marriage; he gets a crown and veil.Baroda: marriage processional for groom on a white horse or elephant.Aarti: bride’s parents welcome groom, mother of the of bride helps him off the horse.Milni: uncle gives Garlands, money and hugs for the family.Ceremony: welcome arch for guests, mandap (4 poles), garland exchange
During the ceremony, all 4 parents raise up four poles of “altar” or Mandap. Rev Chris Mohr has worked with Hindu priests and pundits when there is an interfaith or interethnic couple, providing Christian or even civil ceremony elements. He can also add Hindu elements if there is no Hindu priest present.